Does this mean streaming movie like Wolfwalkers and Klaus won’t be able to compete for Best Animated Feature at the...

Does this mean streaming movie like Wolfwalkers and Klaus won’t be able to compete for Best Animated Feature at the Oscars?

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Who cares about an award show where half the voters don’t even watch half the films they vote for

>caring about the Oscars
The only good thing to come out of it was Spiderverse winning.

No one cares Yea Forums go make another 50 threads about mean old Disney buying up every screen in every theater in every country

Oscars deserve to suffer and disappear

fpbp - the oscars have been a fucking joke for years

How about a rule that excludes all USA movies so it can be more international?

How about a rule that forces you and all the other japanimation loving retards to be shot before and after every commercial break

It probably means "movie has to be played in theaters" which some Netflix movies would still be eligible since some get a VERY limited release screening.
But why is this thread on Yea Forums? Just because animated Netflix movies exist??

They should create a separate category for foreign and indie animated movies, like the Annies.

Netflix doesn't give its movies any theatrical releases unless they're clearly Best Picture contenders.

And under its current rules, a film needs a seven-day run in New York and Los Angeles in order to qualify.

So what exactly pissed him off about Roma? He seems rather salty that a good movie was nominated.

Oscars are worthless but it's god damn pathetic that Hollywood id dying so bad they are wanting to exclude the markets that are killing them.

The Oscars deserve to be about what it was originally about. Recognizing the best of the art. Ironically Spielberg's new rules is only further going to make the Oscars, MTV Awards 2.0.

People who care about the oscars should be rounded up and culled.

Why would a Hollywood circlejerk ever exclude themselves?

I only care when Disney loses the animation category

>Jew changes the rules to suit himself
Wow very surprise much shock.

People are pissed off about money, how much Netflix is spending, and how much it is, or isn’t, bringing in. In short it is becoming the ground work for another 1970s in films and if successful will be the chanted dirges of Hollywood. They fear the death it can bring to them.

This.

STOP CARING ABOUT THE OSCARS

I wonder how many times he tried to get Scorsese to not do a Neflix original movie

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If more of the Oscar nominated movies were on netflix, regular people might have actually heard of and seen them.

This, though it's not just about the money.

indiewire.com/2019/02/steven-spielberg-vs-netflix-oscar-academy-wars-1202047846/
>Clearly, studios are hopping mad that “Roma” could come so close to winning the Academy’s top prize. Here’s a roundup of the complaints:

>Netflix spent too much. One Oscar strategist estimated “Roma” at $50 million in Oscar spend, with “Green Book” at $5 million. (The New York Times reported $25 million; Netflix insists awards were folded into their entire marketing budget.)
>The massive “Roma” push crushed foreign-language distributors. Sony Pictures Classics co-president Michael Barker said he had no financial option but to release Oscar nominees “Never Look Away” and “Capernaum” when theaters opened up after the holidays, which meant fewer Academy voters had a chance to see them.
>“Roma” only spent three weeks as a theatrical exclusive.
>Netflix doesn’t report box office.
>Netflix doesn’t respect the 90-day theatrical window.
>Netflix movies are available in 190 countries, 24-7.

>These claims concern the Academy. However, it’s less clear how they fail to meet Academy standards. Box-office numbers have no impact on Oscar qualifications, and every year films qualify with just one week of exclusive theatrical play. Some theaters held “Roma” for as long as 13 weeks. (IndieWire box-office editor Tom Brueggemann estimated a $3.8 million total.)

Simply put, it's not just about awards qualifications but Netflix playing by its own rules while gaming the original Oscars qualifications system (which never considered future methods of film delivery such as streaming video).

"Black Panther" was on Netflix.

>Black Panther was the only movie at the oscars

Netflix is investing a lot in animation. Plus, Apple is creating its own streaming platform and got Cartoon Saloon to make exclusive content for them.

fpbp

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Spielberg should die, he's the past